- This topic has 8 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 3 months ago by Pug.
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June 23, 2009 at 7:54 pm #84783The HighlanderParticipant
Could someone give me a rough ratio of how much a normal build person could lift in different exercises i.e. if they can curl X, how much would they be able to bench-press?
July 6, 2009 at 9:14 pm #84784The HighlanderParticipantSurely someone must have even a rough idea of what sort of ratio’s would be involved?
July 6, 2009 at 9:58 pm #84785GWHHParticipanttry this, i don't know how acurate it is, but i've been using them for a while and they seem to work.
http://i443.photobucket.com/albums/qq152/GWHH76/Lifting%20Tables/Lift_Tables_1.jpg
July 7, 2009 at 7:53 am #84786the fell batParticipantT-nation.com will have all the information you want about that.
Look for the article entitled "A Question Of Strength". It's precisely your question.
The chart linked above is alright up to a point, but it has a glaring flaw, which is that it's based on bodyweight. Bodyweight is one of the most meaningless statistics in existence, when taken in a vacuum. The chart makes absolutely no sense because it relies on bodyweight as the prime parameter. It fails to take into account body composition, bone density, etc.
August 9, 2009 at 12:05 am #84787The Muffin manParticipantT-nation.com will have all the information you want about that.
Look for the article entitled "A Question Of Strength". It's precisely your question.
The chart linked above is alright up to a point, but it has a glaring flaw, which is that it's based on bodyweight. Bodyweight is one of the most meaningless statistics in existence, when taken in a vacuum. The chart makes absolutely no sense because it relies on bodyweight as the prime parameter. It fails to take into account body composition, bone density, etc.
Not to mention, like BMI calculators, body weight isn't always a good answer for health or fitness.
A skinny man who weighs 150 is unquestionably weaker than a male fitness competitor of the same height, age, and weight.
August 9, 2009 at 2:39 am #84788GWHHParticipantI checked thios site out and it sent me to something called: http://www.tmuscle.com/index.jsp
and i typed in that article name and come out with about 917 different hits on that website. Can you help me narrow it done to the one you are talking about. Thanks.
T-nation.com will have all the information you want about that.
Look for the article entitled "A Question Of Strength". It's precisely your question.
The chart linked above is alright up to a point, but it has a glaring flaw, which is that it's based on bodyweight. Bodyweight is one of the most meaningless statistics in existence, when taken in a vacuum. The chart makes absolutely no sense because it relies on bodyweight as the prime parameter. It fails to take into account body composition, bone density, etc.
August 20, 2009 at 9:13 am #84789DavidParticipantI'm not sure about curls but for bench press the best women can…
Bench almost 3 times bodyweight. (The best raw, with no shirt was 2.2)
Squat or deadlift almost 4x. (Deadlift is less than squat usually.)Interestingly for the men's records add one to each multiple.
August 25, 2009 at 10:48 pm #84790scatParticipanti hope this help:
September 4, 2009 at 6:23 am #84791PugParticipanti hope this help:
Nice resource – Pug
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